Hicks v. Bush

452 F. Supp. 2d 88
CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedMay 25, 2010
DocketCivil Action 02-0299 (CKK), 02-0828(CKK), 04-1136(JDB), 04-1144(RWR), 04-1164(RBW), 04-1194(HHK), 04-1227(RBW), 04-1254(HHK), 04-1519(JR), 04-1937(PLF), 04-2022(PLF), 04-2046(CKK), 04-2215(RMC), 05-0022(JR), 05-0023(RWR), 05-0247(HHK), 05-0270(JR), 05-0329(PLF), 05-0345(JDB), 05-0409(EGS), 05-0454(RMU), 05-0490(PLF), 05-0492(JR), 05-0520(RMU), 05-0526(RMU), 05-0569(JR), 05-0584(CKK), 05-0634(RWR), 05-0640(EGS), 05-0723(RWR), 05-0748(RMC), 05-0764(CKK), 05-0765(EGS), 05-0877(JR), 05-0879(RBW), 05-0884(RMC), 05-0886(EGS), 05-0887(RWR), 05-0888(CKK), 05-0993(RMU), 05-0994(JDB), 05-0998(RMU), 05-0999(RBW), 05-1000(PLF), 05-1002(EGS), 05-1008(JDB), 05-1009(JDB), 05-1011(JR), 05-1048(RMU), 05-1124(RMC), 05-1189(JR), 05-1220(RMU), 05-1234(EGS), 05-1238(CKK), 05-1241(RMC), 05-1246(RWR), 05-1353(RMC), 05-1429(RMU), 05-1453(RMU), 05-1487(RMC), 05-1489(RMU), 05-1490(PLF), 05-1491(JR), 05-1509(RMU), 05-1555(JR), 05-1607(RMU), 05-1623(RWR), 05-1638(CKK), 05-1641(CKK), 05-1645(PLF), 05-1704(JR), 05-1714(RWR), 05-1806(CKK), 05-1971(RMC), 05-1983(RMU), 05-2010(JR), 05-2029(JDB), 05-2088(RWR), 05-2104(RBW), 05-2112(RBW), 05-2185(JR), 05-2199(HHK), 05-2249(RMC), 05-2348(EGS), 05-2367(RWR), 05-2369(RWR), 05-2370(EGS), 05-2376(RBW), 05-2378(JDB), 05-2379(JR), 05-2380(CKK), 05-2384(RWR), 05-2385(RMU), 05-2386(RBW), 05-2452(PLF), 05-2458(RWR), 05-2467(PLF), 05-2477(RMU), 05-2479(HHK), 06-0618(RWR)
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 452 F. Supp. 2d 88 (Hicks v. Bush) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hicks v. Bush, 452 F. Supp. 2d 88 (D.D.C. 2010).

Opinion

AMENDED MEMORANDUM ORDER 1

ROBERTSON, District Judge.

In each of the Guantanamo Bay habeas cases pending in this Court, the government has moved for approval of its plan for reviewing documents seized from detainees as part of an investigation of three apparently coordinated suicides in June 2006. The plan calls for the use of a “Filter Team,” walled off from government investigators and prosecutors, that would review the seized materials and set aside anything arguably protected by the attorney-client privilege. The motion is strongly opposed by the petitioner detainees, many of whom have cross-moved for the return of documents that have been impounded, or for contempt sanctions, or both. After considering the briefs of the parties and reviewing the transcript of a lengthy hearing on the same motion before Judge Richard Leon in August 2006, I have decided to grant the government’s motion. This ruling will be without prejudice to petitioners’ cross-motions, which will be taken up and decided at a later time. The reasons for my decision are set forth below. My order will apply in each of the above-captioned cases. 2

BACKGROUND

In most of the Guantanamo habeas cases, communications between detainees and them counsel are governed by a protective order. 3 The protective order facilitates counsel’s access to their detainee clients with an eye to protecting national security interests. Am. Prot. Order ¶ 2. It sets forth procedures for all contact be *95 tween detainees and their counsel, as well as rules governing counsel’s exposure to classified information. An implicit premise of the protective order is that communication between detainees and their counsel enjoys the protection of the attorney-client privilege. See Am. Prot. Order ¶ 28 (noting that the presence of security officials “shall not operate as a waiver of, limit, or otherwise render inapplicable, the attorney-client privilege or work product protections.”).

Annexed to the protective order are Revised Procedures for Counsel Access. These procedures address the logistics of counsel visits and attorney-client mail in greater detail. Again, the attorney-client privilege is referenced only indirectly, such as in the definition of legal mail. See Am. Prot. Order Ex. A.II.E. (legal mail includes “privileged documents”). Legal mail sent by counsel to detainees is to be opened by a “Privilege Team” that searches the mail for prohibited physical contraband. Compliant mail is to be forwarded to military personnel in sealed and marked envelopes; GTMO personnel are then to deliver these envelopes to the recipient detainee without opening them. Am. Prot. Order Ex. A. IV.A.3-4. The Revised Procedures also include rules for material that is taken in and out of legal meetings, classification review of information communicated by detainees to counsel, provision of paper for the drafting of legal mail by detainees, and the circumstances under which phone calls between detainees and counsel may be permitted.

On June 10, 2006, three Guantanamo detainees were discovered dead in their cells. Respt’s Mot. For Procedures Related to Review of Certain Detainee Materials & Req. For Expedited Briefing at 3 (“Respt’s Mot.”). News reports suggest that the three detainees hanged themselves using torn bed sheets. M 4 The triple suicides were the most recent and extreme incidents in a string of detainee security violations at the Guantanamo Bay facility. On May 18, 2006, several detainees in a communal housing facility ambushed and assaulted Guantanamo guards with makeshift weapons; on the same day, two Guantanamo Bay detainees overdosed on medications provided by the facility. Id. at 4. Guantanamo personnel have since uncovered systematic, unauthorized stockpiling of medications by detainees. Id.

The NCIS began investigating the apparent suicides immediately. 5 Declaration of Special Agent in Charge Carol Kist-hardt ¶3 (“Kisthardt Decl.”). Investigators started searching the cells of the deceased detainees. Id. They found what appeared to be handwritten suicide notes on the bodies of the three detainees. Id. Another handwritten note related to the suicides was discovered in a mesh wall of one of the deceased detainees’ cells. Id. The note discovered in the wall was “written in Arabic on notepaper that had been stamped ‘Attorney Client Privilege,’ ” and the name used by the author differed from the name of the deceased detainee who had lived in the cell. 6 Id.

*96 Investigators then broadened their search to include other occupied cells in the same cellblock. Id. While searching the cellblock, investigators discovered handwritten notes they believed to be relevant, “potentially authored by at least two of the deceased detainees,” in the cell of a detainee other than the three suicide victims. According to Special Agent Kist-hardt, many of these notes were written on stationery stamped with indicia of privilege: “Attorney-Client Communication,” “Privileged and Confidential,” etc. Id.

After discovering three notes on the bodies of the deceased, one suicide-related note in the cell one of the deceased, and a number of relevant notes in a fourth cell on the same cellblock, the NCIS decided to “expand the scope of the search.” Id. ¶ 4. According to Special Agent Kisthardt, the purpose of the expanded search was to “pursue logical investigative leads concerning the deaths of the three detainees and to determine whether other suicides were planned or likely to be planned.” Id. The expansion of the search was quite dramatic: NCIS investigators seized all materials from the cells of all detainees in the entire Guantanamo facility. 7 The materials collected weighed 1,100 pounds and included “personal items and papers, including legal material and other correspondence.” Id.

NCIS investigators sorted the seized materials and placed them into small bags labeled with detainee-identifying information such as inmate number, camp, cell block, and cell number. Supp. Dec. Carol Kisthardt ¶ 3 (“Kisthardt Supp. Deck”). These small bags were then put into grocery-sized paper bags. Id. Eventually the larger bags were taken to NCIS offices and placed in sealed cardboard boxes in a secure setting. Id. On June 18, 2006, NCIS investigators began sorting through the bags. Id. at ¶ 4.

The scope of the initial sort is the subject of some controversy. On July 7, 2006, the government represented that “materials from bags pertaining to eleven detainees” were sorted. Kisthardt Decl. ¶ 5. Over a month later, the government filed a Supplemental Memorandum correcting this assertion. In fact, the detainee-specific bags of “approximately 155 detainees” were searched. Kisthardt Supp.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
452 F. Supp. 2d 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hicks-v-bush-dcd-2010.